This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations .(November 2018) |
Ronald Kelly | |
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Born | Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. | November 20, 1959
Occupation | Writer, novelist |
Period | 1986–96 and 2006– |
Genre | Horror, speculative, western |
Notable works | Undertaker's Moon, Hindsight, Fear, Blood Kin, Dark Dixie: Tales of Southern Horror, After the Burn , The Buzzard Zone |
Website | |
ronaldkelly |
Ronald Kelly (born November 20, 1959) is best known as a speculative fiction and "southern-fried" horror writer. His tales are usually set in the Southern United States and feature language and actions that are associated with those regions.
Ronald Kelly was born November 20, 1959, in Nashville, Tennessee and grew up in the small rural town of Pegram, Tennessee. He attended Pegram Elementary School in Pegram, Tennessee and Cheatham County Central High School in Ashland City, Tennessee before starting his writing career. He currently lives in the rural farming community of Brush Creek, Tennessee with his wife, three children, and a Jack Russel terrier named Toby.
Ronald Kelly originally had aspirations of becoming a comic book artist and spent most of his high school years writing and drawing his own comic books featuring his own superheroes and characters. He also collaborated with classmate Lowell Cunningham, who later became the creator of the Men In Black comic book series, which spawned several major motion pictures. Kelly began writing fiction during his junior year in high school, concentrating on horror, suspense, and male adventure. Between 1977 and 1985, he wrote several novels in the adventure and western genres that were never published. It was only when he turned back to his first love, horror fiction, that he became successful. He began his professional writing career in 1986 and quickly sold his first short story, "Breakfast Serial," to Terror Time Again magazine. Between 1986 and 1996, Kelly's work was featured in the small press horror magazines of that era, appearing regularly in independently-published magazines such as Cemetery Dance, Deathrealm, Noctulpa, and numerous others. His first novel, Hindsight was released by Zebra Books in 1990. His audiobook collection, Dark Dixie: Tales of Southern Horror, was on the nominating ballot of the 1992 Grammy Awards for Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album. Zebra published seven of Ronald Kelly's novels from 1990 to 1996. Ronald's short fiction work has been published by Cemetery Dance , Borderlands 3, Deathrealm , Dark at Heart, Hot Blood: Seeds of Fear, and many more. After selling hundreds of thousands of books, the bottom dropped out of the horror market in 1996. When Zebra dropped their horror line in October 1996, Ronald Kelly stopped writing for almost ten years and worked various jobs including welder, factory worker, production manager, drugstore manager, and custodian. His hesitation to write horror fiction during that time was partly due to his religious convictions; he is a Southern Baptist and born-again Christian.
In 2006, Ronald Kelly started writing again. In early 2008, Croatoan Publishing released his work Flesh Welder as a stand-alone chapbook, and it quickly sold out. In early 2009, Cemetery Dance Publications released a limited edition hardcover of his first short story collection, Midnight Grinding & Other Twilight Terrors. In 2010, Cemetery Dance released his first novel in over ten years called, Hell Hollow in hardcover. Full Moon Press had made a deal to release all of Ronald Kelly's previous novels in hardcover format with bonus material and a brand new added novella in each release. They were calling the series of books The Essential Ronald Kelly, but the deal fell through when Full Moon Press closed its doors. Shortly afterward, Thunderstorm Books published The Essential Ronald Kelly Collection in seven limited edition hardcovers over a three-year period. During that time, Thunderstorm published Kelly regularly, releasing two additional hardcovers, "After the Burn", a post-apocalyptic horror story collection, and "Restless Shadows", the sequel to his first novel, "Hindsight". They also published such story collections as "The Sick Stuff" and "Mister Glow Bones & Other Halloween Tales".
In 2018, Kelly announced that Crossroad Press (the publisher of his eBooks and audiobooks) would be publishing his Southern-fried zombie novel, The Buzzard Zone in eBook, trade paperback, and audiobook formats. The Buzzard Zone is a tale of apocalyptic horror set in the mountain country of Tennessee and North Carolina. Also, Thunderstorm Books would be releasing a limited edition hardcover of the novel sometime in 2019.
Ronald Kelly contributed two books to the Slocum series of western novels that are collectively published under the pen name "Jake Logan".
Hardcover series that were originally announced by the now defunct Full Moon Press, but were published with a new publisher, Thunderstorm Books between 2011 and 2013. Each book contained a new novella that included characters from the original novels or are linked to the original novel storyline. The Essentials were published in the following order:
Stories include: "Introduction" "Mister Glow-Bones" "The Outhouse" "Billy's Mask" "Pins & Needles" "Black Harvest" "Pelingrad's Pit" "Mister Mack & the Monster Mobile" "The Halloween Train" "The Candy in the Ditch Gang" "Halloweens: Past & Present "Monsters in a Box"
The following have not had a physical re-release since their original printings (some have been released digitally):
Bad Moon Books reprinted the following Ronald Kelly titles as mass market trade paperbacks: After the BurnTimber GrayCumberland Furnace & Other Fear-Forged Fables
Sinister Grin Press reprinted the following Ronald Kelly titles as mass market trade paperbacks: Undertaker's MoonFearHell Hollow
David Niall Wilson's Macabre Ink Digital/Crossroad Press has released digital editions (PDF, Kindle, etc.) of the following:
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